UndauntedFlyer
Ease the nose down
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2006
- Posts
- 1,062
Nosehair: Your advice is right on.I'll follow up UndauntedFlyer's comments with some emphasis on this point.
You would think that the written tests would cover this more since a large percentage of instructor and student violations are on endorsements and insufficient knowledge of requisite paperwork regarding civilian pilot and maintenance records,...but, it ain't so. Unless they devise a special test exclusively focused on Part 61 certification knowledge.
The average civilian trained flight instructor is sadly uninformed as to the depth of knowledge required to properly navigate the cesspool of certification regulations. Unfortunately, a lot of civilian trained pilots think that passing the written tests demonstrates sufficient knowledge. It is not. It is only a small "snapshot" of the required depth of knowledge in each area. The oral portion of the flight test actually is supposed to determine the proficiency of the knowledge.
And methinks the military IP will not be required to "demonstrate" practical knowledge of Part 61 and 91. He/She will probably only do a written test.
So we are only concerned that you guys not get caught with your pants down when first dealing with "the FAA".
Surprisingly the CFI writtens will only address subject like Psychology of Teaching and then something about how various certification maneuvers are done, VFR and IFR. However, as Nosehair has said, this will not be anywhere near enough information.
There is an FAA way and a military way of doing most everything from stalls to lazy eights and a CFI must be an expert on how the FAA wants these things done as well as the areas of special emphasis to be taught. An airplane instructor must be intimately familiar with the Airplane Flying Handbook, the Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge, many FAA Advisory Circulars, the AIM, the FAR's, especially part 61, the Practical Test Standards along with acceptable standards for Private Pilot ASEL, Private Pilot AMEL, Commercial Pilot ASEL, Commercial Pilot AMEL, and the Instrument Rating-Airplane.
The Flight Instructor test, when it is administered by an FAA inspector or a DPE, is the most difficult test given by the FAA because of all the FAA certification knowledge that an applicant must have and be able to demonstrate. Again, it’s not the facts of flying that will be hard to learn, it will be all the administrative and certification information.
Good luck and I'm pleased that you want to be a CFI.